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Pleasance G. McBlair, Correspondence From, 1826 - 1837

 File — Box: 6

Dates

  • 1826 - 1837

Conditions Governing Access

This collection is open for research use.

Extent

From the Collection: 2.92 Linear Feet (7 full Hollinger boxes)

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

There are about 3,000 items in this collection spanning seven boxes. The earliest dated item is of 1797 and the latest 1849.

All papers appear to be from the files of Michael McBlair who came to this country from Belfast in 1789 (letter from Wm. Algeo?, 9 November 1825). He became an active merchant in Baltimore, manager of Hollins and McBlair (offices foot of Gay Street near Customs House) which owned some famous ships and traded all over the world. In the course of his rise to this position, he appears to have made voyages to many distant ports. However, items belonging to the years before 1820 are relatively few and do not afford any consecutive picture of McBlair's activities.

The papers may be said to consist of (1) family letters, (2) business letters, (3) memoranda of cash expenditures, notes given and received, and other financial transactions.

In 1802, McBlair was married by the Presbyterian minister in Baltimore, to Pleasance, daughter the Revolutionary patriot Dr. Lyde Goodwin (d. 1800). There are numerous letters from all of the four daughters and five sons of this marriage (perhaps other children who died in infancy). The family tie was strong and appears to have held all members closely bound to the group to the end of the period.

Hollins and McBlair went bankrupt in 1822. McBlair then went into cotton manufacturing. He briefly managed a factory on the Patapsco for the Savage Company in which his wife and children owned stock, but he soon resignd, sold the stock and promoted the formation of the Maryland Manufacturing Company. Most of the capital was supplied by his wife's brothers, Lyde Goodwin of Baltimore, and Charles Goodwin Ridgely of the US Navy (eventually Commodore), but they entrusted McBlair with complete control of the enterprise. He superintended the building of the factory on the Little Gunpowder near Kingsville, and moved his family there in 1825 from the house on Franklin Street near St. Paul where they had lived many years.

As the collection does not include the books of Hollins and McBlair or the Maryland Manufacturing Company, it does not afford material for a consecutive history of either of these enterprises. McBlair, however, was a careful and exact accountant. His memoranda of receipts and expenses extend to the minutest items. For some years, they are almost complete, and throw much light on prices, wages and the cost of living.

In 1818-1819, a series of letters to McBlair from John Moses, an active merchant in Philadelphia, are essentially market reports, giving fluctuations of prices of many important comodities, and United States bank stock.

In 1819-1820, correspondence between McBlair and Andrew Thompson of Frederick, throws some light on trade between Frederick and Baltimore.

In 1799-1800, numerous papers relating to the voyage of the Samuel Smith from Batavia via Lisbon to London give much information on business relations between a Baltimore merchant and his London factors, and show that Hollins and McBlair then had an important interest in numerous trading voyages to all parts of the world.

Also of possible interest are complex borrowings by which McBlair succeeded in raising funds with which to build the factory on the little Gunpowder and keep it in operation under adverse circumstances. His relations with his employees (who were also tenants of the Company and customers of its store) appear to have been usually strained and often tempestuous.

The papers might interest the historian of Scotch-Irish migration to America because of a number of letters from McBlair's relatives and friends in Ireland, because of his success in establishing himself as a member of the ruling class over here, and because his three brothers who also came over achieved no success whatever in spite of assistance from him.

At the time McBlair married Pleasance Goodwin, her mother (nee Abby or Abigail Levy) was according to the Baltimore Directory for 1803, taking boarders at her house at 244 Baltimore Street. Yet the marriage allied McBlair with a group of families well established in Maryland, and with good connections elsewhere. Mrs. McBlair's uncle, Nathan Lovy, merchant, and aunt, Philadephia Lovy, spinster, are both mentioned in the 1826-1828 journal of her brother, Lyde Goodwin the Younger, in the Lloyd Papers in this Society. Uncle Nat apparently declined to become involved in the Maryland Manufacturing Company, but references to him in these letters give the impression of an interesting personality.

McBlair's greatest prosperity was likely in the period of the War of 1812, for which there are few letters in this collection. From other sources, we know that he owned or had a controlling share in many famous vessels, including privateers, and that profits were often enormous. In addition to the Franklin Street house and lots, McBlair had a place in the country, numerous servants, carriage and horses, etc. The curious thing is that the bankruptcy seems to have made little change in the family's style of living and none atall in its social position. The Franklin Street property and the country place seem to have been sold, but at the Factory there was an almost ceaseloss flow of house guests. In spite of abject poverty, many servants and a carriage and horses were maintained. The older boys were sent to St. Mary's College, and for the younger ones tutors were imported from New England. There is no indication of spending for display. The McBlairs gave no balls or parties; they kept careful track of expenses, bought in the cheapest market; mended their old clothing and made it last as long as possible. But certain things they regarded as indispensable, and these included food and drink, doctors and medicines, education for the children, and maintaing contact with good society. Mrs. McBlair appears in her letters a devout Christian (though there is little mention of church going), a devoted and watchful mother, and wife, and a capable housekeeper.

Before the family moved to the Factory, the McBlair's eldest daughter, Alicia, was married (1824) to Edward Lloyd VI of Wye House. From then on all the McBlairs paid frequent visits to Wye and their letters give a great deal of information about the Lloyds, their neighbors, and life in that section of the Eastern Shore.

Mrs. McBlair was the eldest of a large family most of whom seem to have died rather early in life. Others figure prominently in these letters, especially her brothers Lyde, who lived in Baltimore, and Charles, who was in the Navy, and her sisters Eliza (Mrs. Stevenson) and Maria (Mrs. Greenwood). Charles changed his name from Goodwyn to Ridgely. His influence obtained commissions as midshipmen for the McBlair boys, Charles in March, 1823, and William in November, 1825. Both remained in the Navy and attained the rank of captain, and in 1861 resigned to serve the Confederacy. Their letters and letters to them from other naval officers make the McBlair papers a valuable source for the history of the Navy, 1823 - 1849.

Goodwin (Lyde Goodwin McBlair) was the eldest son. After graduating from St. John's College, he read law for a time and then became manager of the cotton factory. He was much more successful than his father at getting on with the hands that his Uncle Lyde wanted him to remain permanently on the job, but Goodwin was eager to get away. In 1826 he went (as supercargo) to Callao. His letters thence describe conditions following the abdication of San Matin. In 1837-1839, Goodwin went on the USS Independence, as secretary to Commodore Nicholson, first to London, then to Rio de Janeiro and Monte Video. His letters are the best written in the collection.

There are also many letters from Goodwin's wife. According to a document in the collection, they were married 23 January, 1834. She was Matilda Chase Lockerman, granddaughter of Samuel Chase from whom her mother inherited the Harwood house in Annapolis. Matilda generally lived thereafter with the McBlairs, but paid visits to her mother in Annapolis. Later they lived in Annapolis, Goodwin having obtained employment by the State.

Hollins (John Hollins McB.) McB's fourth son, was employed by his father at $30 a month in 1832 to act as his agent in Baltimore. He soon went to Washington and obtined a temporary government job that seems to have become permanent in 1833.

In 1835, for the health of Charles McBlair and Alicia Lloyd, their mother, Pleasance McBlair, went with them on an extended tour of the Virginia Springs. Her numerous letters give some idea of life at these resorts.

In October 1835, Hollins married Augusta Gadsby whose father kept a hotel in Washington. Gadsbys seem to have been old friends of the McBlairs and were probably from Baltimore. In the spring of 1836, Hollins went West to Mississippi, met Colonel Vick of Vicksburg and decided Mississippi was a land of opportunity. On his return to the East, he and Parkin (Thomas Parkin McBlair, youngest of the sons) decided to open a store in Mississippi, probably in Canton. Later letters from Hollins and Parkin tell the exciting story of the rise and fall of the town of Sharon, still unbuilt when they chose it for the site of their store, and soon overtaken by the panic of 1837. At the same time, Alicia's husband, Edward Lloyd, to buy land in Miss. to employ some his surplus Negroes. A letter from him describes part of his journey across the Appalachians.

In the winter of1835-1836, Elizabeth, the McBlairs' second daughter, spent two months in Washington with Hollins and Augusta. According to Hollins, she was the belle of the season. She received a proposal of marriage from the lord of Monticello (the justly famous Captain Uriah Levy of the Navy), a proposal that the McBlairs regarded with scorn and amusement.

In November 1836, Elizabeth married J.M. Lloyd, younger brother of Alicia's husband, and went to live on the Eastern Shore, first at Woodville, then at Presque Isle, both Lloyd plantations. From then until 1848, numerous letters from her give a fairly complete history of events in the McBlair and Lloyd families.

Mrs. McBlair died in September 1836, and Alicia in the following July. Alicia's children continued to visit their grandfather at frequent intervals, and McBlair occasionally visted Wye.

Commodore C. G. Ridgely appears to have had an illegitimate son known variously as Charles Smith or Charles Ridgely Smith. In 1827, when about 7 years old, this child was informally adopted by the McBlairs and remained a member of the household until 1834 when his father obtained for him a commission as midshipman. His letters indicate that his education was very inferior to that of the McBlair children. According to Hamersley's Register, he got to the rank of passed midshipman but was eventually dismissed. He should not be confused with Charles Smith Ridgely, also a naval officer, from whom there is at least one letter to Michael McBlair in this collection.

In his merchant days, McBlair had dealings with a wealthy Cuban named Ximenes who sent his son, Antonio, to St. John's College with the McBlair boys. McBlair acted as his guardian and kept account of his expenses for which he at times advanced funds. The correspondence throws light on the life and studies of a foreign student at college in the United States in the 1820s.

Mrs. McBlair's youngest brother, Robert Goodwin, eventually married Elizabeth Ann Taylor of Savannah and settled there. Her father seems to have had large interests in Cuba. Letters from him and from William and Elizabeth McBlair who visited his family in Savannah, describe events and conditions in that city.

There are a few letters from an older brother, Thomas Goodwin, a merchant in New York, in the year 1815. The firm was Stevenson and Goodwin, probably George Stevenson who married Eliza Goodwin.

The McBlairs patronized the Baltimore Library and there is mention of many books that they borrowed.

The letters mention many physicians in Baltimore, Kingsville and Talbot County. A set of prescriptions by one of these doctors is the 1824 folder. Alicia and her mother went to Philadelphia to get advice from Dr. Physick. Hayden, the family dentist in Baltimore, is frequently mentioned. Charles McBlair wrote for advice to a doctor he had served with in the Navy.

Thomas Parkin McBlair became a purser in the Navy and some of his records as purser are among the papers.

There are several letters from Samuel Francis Du Pont, later admiral, and other naval officers who were friends of either Charles or William McBlair.

Creator

Repository Details

Part of the H. Furlong Baldwin Library Repository

Contact:
H. Furlong Baldwin Library
Maryland Center for History and Culture
610 Park Avenue
Baltimore MD 21201 United States
4106853750